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I mentioned this his start before yesterday's. Interesting to see it in front of me though.I have no clue what this means, or how much it affects. But definitely something to note.He's pitched well, although 2 of those starts have been against Seattle which he dominates

TuckerBlair89 wrote:I mentioned this his start before yesterday's. Interesting to see it in front of me though.I have no clue what this means, or how much it affects. But definitely something to note.He's pitched well, although 2 of those starts have been against Seattle which he dominates

Yeah, no idea why it's happening or what it means.

Could it be because he was sick? Is he sacrificing velocity for command? I really have no idea.

I think it's a combo of a good day for him in the first start (he probably wasn't going to match that velocity going forward) and the flu sapping his strength. It sounded like he was really sick and it effected him for 2 starts which is over a week so not only did it sap his strength but it probably knocked him off his routine and it may take a couple weeks for him to get back his strength and get back on a roll with his routine. I'm not too worried.

1.) He was amped up the his first start and throwing on adrenaline2.) The flu took some strength away from him3.) The Safeco Park radar gun is pumped up a few mph. Tillman reached 97 in the 9th inning. Chen was throwing 95 all game. Don said the radar gun was giving Iwakuma a few more mph on his fastball.

According to MASN, birdwatcher55 is right, he was hitting 94 in the later innings.

He was really sick for over a week. It's very possible that he's not 100% yet. I've noticed every game he pitches he starts off low 90's and pumps it up as the game goes on. I don't know if that is intentional and they are taking a page from Verlander's book or if it just takes him a few innings to really find his fastball where he can trust letting it go.

Matt P wrote:According to MASN, birdwatcher55 is right, he was hitting 94 in the later innings.

He was really sick for over a week. It's very possible that he's not 100% yet. I've noticed every game he pitches he starts off low 90's and pumps it up as the game goes on. I don't know if that is intentional and they are taking a page from Verlander's book or if it just takes him a few innings to really find his fastball where he can trust letting it go.

I think that's just how he is to be honest. But as mentioned above, until he really starts getting lit up, I'm probably not going to worry about it entirely too much.

TuckerBlair89 wrote:I think that's just how he is to be honest. But as mentioned above, until he really starts getting lit up, I'm probably not going to worry about it entirely too much.

Yeah, nothing to worry about. His change up and cutter are much improved this year which is more important than his velocity on the fastball. He couldn't control the breaking ball Monday but that has always been his best pitch and he did strike out a couple with it.

The only thing I thought was weird from Tillman and Wieters in his last start was that they went change up consecutively a few times.

Just thinking out loud here, but what exactly are you changing speeds on when throwing two 81 MPH change ups in a row? I'm not sure whether this is Tillman, Wieters, or whomever, but that doesn't exactly scream "good idea" to me.

Probably Wieters. I've seen all the pitchers do things like this all year. He must think that the hitter won't expect it a 2nd time in a row. One thing I always wonder is what is he looking at in the dugout. I thought he called his own pitches yet he always seems to look in the dugout when a runner is on base.

Matt P wrote:Probably Wieters. I've seen all the pitchers do things like this all year. He must think that the hitter won't expect it a 2nd time in a row. One thing I always wonder is what is he looking at in the dugout. I thought he called his own pitches yet he always seems to look in the dugout when a runner is on base.

It often looks like Wieters is getting calls from the dugout. If the case, I'm not sure how that is helping his progression as a catcher with training wheels still on. I'm not 100% sure that's the case though.